ATL-specific launch configurations and ANT tasks

ATL API & Services

However, notably for integration purposes in Eclipse solutions, it is necessary to launch transformations by mean of Java code.

This is why ATL directly provides in addition a dedicated API and core services enabling to run ATL transformations programmatically, including the loading (injection) and saving (extraction) of corresponding required metamodels and models.

How do I generate text from models?

There are several possibilies.
We only detail some of them here.

Using ATL

You can specify a query over your model in ATL.
An example of this is available in the UML-to-JavaCode transformation.

The atlanticRaster zoo is also using this technique.
It first transforms KM3 metamodels into DOT models with a KM32DOT.atl transformation. It then uses DOT2Text.atl to query a string, corresponding to the generated DOT code, from the DOT model.
These two ATL transformation/query can be found from here.

Then, an ANT script makes use of the atl.saveModel task with an ATL extractor pointing to the DOT2Text.atl transformation.

Using other tools

The Xtext framework in Eclipse Modeling is dedicated to this kind of tasks.

TCS (Textual Concrete Syntax) is also a tool enabling the specification of textual syntaxes for metamodels.

How do I declare/use external parameters in ATL transformations?

Using an XML file

A solution is to save transformation parameters in a extern XML model. In the transformation, you will use an helper to get parameters from your model.

To inject and/or extract XML models (and to get the simple XML metamodel in Ecore), you can check out and install the org.eclipse.m2m.atl.projectors.xml plugin with your ATL Eclipse install.

A version of this plugin built for the Juno ATL version can be downloaded from here and has to be copied to the dropins folder of your Eclipse install before starting.
For other ATL versions, the plugin sources first have to be checked out into your workspace in order to re-export the plugin as a compatible deployable one (to be then copied to the dropins folder similarly as mentioned before).

How can I tune the XML output of ATL?

The ATL Virtual Machine can write target models to XML files in two different ways:

XMI writing is delegated to EMF.

Target models can be extracted into XML files using custom XML Schemas.

To do this, the target model is first transformed into a model conforming to a specific XML metamodel.
The resulting XML model can then be extracted into an XML document.
An example can be found in the Table2SVGPieChart transformation scenario: the target SVG model is transformed into an XML model that can then be extracted (see documentation of scenario for more details and README.txt in zip file for directions).
The process of transforming a model to XML then extracting it can be automated using ATL-specific ANT tasks and the org.eclipse.m2m.atl.projectors.xml plugin (see previous section).

How can I implement my own injector or extractor?

An injection/extraction is a transformation from/to another Technical Space (e.g., XML, Grammarware) to/from the Model Engineering Technical Space.
An injector/extractor is a component implementing an injection/extraction.

How can I transform UML models?

There are several implementations of UML.
The one we consider here is the de-facto standard implementation from Eclipse: the UML2 project.

ATL allows to transform such UML models as any other EMF models.

The UML2 metamodel must be loaded from the EMF registry (i.e., by namespace URI).
This can be done using the "EMF Registry..." button of the ATL launch configuration, or using the nsURI attribute of the atl.loadModel task.

How can I retrieve tagged values from stereotyped UML model elements?

In ATL, a profiled UML model used as source model is viewed like any other UML model.
You generally (i.e., when the profile is referenced with a valid relative path) do not have to specify the profile used with the model.
So, in the header of the ATL module you just have:

module uml2something;
create OUT : targetMetamodel from IN : UML;

If atl seems to ignore your stereotypes, you can add your profile as source model. You obtain the following header:

getAppliedStereotype(sterotypeName : String) on a UML element to get the stereotype with the name "stereotypeName" applied on this element. This operation needs the fully qualifed name of the stereotype so it looks like: profileName::sterotypeName.

getValue(stereotype : Stereotype, propertyName : String) to get the Value of the tagged value with name "propertyName" on the stereotype "stereotype" (the sterotype can be retrieved by getAppliedStereotype).

can also be useful to check if a stereotype is applied on the UML element before trying to retrieve it or to get a tagged value from it.
As it uses getAppliedStereotype, it needs the fully qualified name of the stereotype (e.g., profileName::sterotypeName).

How can I specify a Virtual Machine operation in Java? (Deprecated)

It is possible to add new Java operations to the ATL Virtual Machine (VM).
These operations can then be called like helpers.